For Canada Day, we"re peering up at "Passage migratoire" ("Migratory Passage"), an art installation of hanging woven canoes in Old Québec City. It was part of the 2016 edition of Passages Insolites (Unusual Passages), an annual public art exhibition in the historic Petit-Champlain and Saint-Roch districts of the city. The canoe has long been associated with Canada"s national history, linked with early explorers, fur traders, Indigenous peoples, and colonists who ventured out into the wilderness of the great north. The artist behind this installation, Giorgia Volpe, was inspired by "the idea of migration and its influence on the formation of our society and our territory." Canada welcomes on average about 200,000 immigrants each year, many of whom will become Canadian citizens. The migrations continue…
Celebrating migrations
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Happy Fat Tuesday!
-
Muskoxen in Dovre-Sunndalsfjella National Park, Norway
-
Just a couple of yellow-billed hornbills
-
Norway s Kjeragbolten boulder
-
Balloons and camels are two ways to catch a ride here
-
A magnificent monolith
-
English National Ballet performing The Nutcracker
-
Glass footbridge in Zhangjiajie, China
-
New Year s Day
-
The moth wonderful time of the year
-
Panda Day
-
Hemakuta Hill, Hampi, India
-
A river runs through rice fields
-
Earth Day
-
Christmas Bird Count
-
Fresh water on the Silk Road
-
Mount Rainier National Park
-
Women s suffrage at 100
-
A house of grand scale(s)
-
Daylight saving time
-
Taj Mahal, Agra, Uttar Pradesh, India
-
The Brocken, Harz National Park, Germany
-
A bridge of Madison County
-
Formal garden at Château de Villandry, Loire Valley, France
-
Wedded Rocks, Japan
-
Happy Syttende Mai!
-
A throng of ice and spires
-
Aspens in the White River National Forest, Colorado
-
In celebration of America’s national bird
-
Taughannock Falls State Park
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

